Milfoil Infested Lake Control Strategies.......Eradication – 2,4-D treatment2,4-D (aquatic herbicide): 2,4-D is a relatively fast-acting herbicide that kills the entire plant (systemic herbicide). Its mode of action is primarily as a stimulant of plant stem elongation. This herbicide is considered to be “selective” for milfoil because it generally targets the broad-leaved plants (dicots) like milfoil. Most other aquatic plants are monocots (grass-like) and are unaffected by 2,4-D. Navigate® and Aqua-Kleen® are granular 2,4-D products registered for aquatic use and DMA*4IVM® is a liquid formulation. Waterbodies suitable for 2,4-D treatment: Sites suitable for treatment include lakes or ponds partially infested with Eurasian watermilfoil such as waterbodies where milfoil has recently invaded, but where the extent of the infestation is beyond what can be removed by hand pulling or bottom screening. In these situations an herbicide, like 2,4-D, that is effective for spot treatment can be used to reduce the amount of milfoil so that hand pulling can remove any milfoil plants that are not killed. 2,4-D is suitable for spot treatment because it is a fast-acting herbicide that only needs a 48-hour contact time with the plant. 2,4-D can be used for milfoil control in heavily infested lakes, but it does not provide the nearly 100 percent kill of the herbicide fluridone. Because many plants remain alive and scattered throughout the littoral zone after 2,4-D treatment, hand pulling extensive areas after treatment may not be effective in heavily infested lakes. Lake residents must be willing to fund the follow-up activities necessary to ensure continued milfoil eradication (or maintenance at extremely low amounts). Special considerations: Water users need to be identified prior to 2,4-D application. Water within the treatment areas cannot be used for drinking until 2,4-D concentrations have declined to 70 ppb and water used for irrigation cannot be used until 2,4-D concentrations are 100 ppb or less. If water users do not have other water sources, the project proponents must arrange for alternative water supply during the time that 2,4-D is in the water. In Washington, testing has shown that water both inside and outside of the treated area is generally below the drinking water standard three to five days after treatment. A permit called a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit (NPDES) permit is needed to treat waterbodies with aquatic herbicides. You can obtain NPDES coverage under the Washington Department of Agriculture Permit for noxious weed control. Click here for more details of the permitting process. Description of a milfoil eradication project in Washington using 2,4-D: Lakes where 2,4-D is being used for milfoil eradication in Washington typically have milfoil scattered in patches within the littoral zone. The lake is surveyed immediately prior to herbicide application and milfoil locations are mapped and Global Positioning System (GPS) points established. Herbicide application can begin as soon as milfoil starts rapidly growing. Effective treatments can be made as early as April or May and as late as early September. Timing is also dependent on salmon usage since juvenile salmonids should not be exposed to chemicals. Treatment in the spring/summer should be followed by a late summer survey and possible retreatment if large patches remain or if more milfoil is discovered in untreated areas of the lake. A month after the initial 2,4-D treatment, the littoral zone of the lake should be thoroughly inspected by divers to identify and map remaining milfoil plants. Sparse populations of remaining milfoil plants should be hand pulled or covered with bottom barrier. Larger, denser patches may need to be treated again with 2,4-D, although in that case some assessment should be made as to why the initial treatment was ineffective. Diver and surface inspections should continue at least twice a year during the growing season. Survey work should be as frequent as can be afforded since small milfoil plants may be easily overlooked within the native plant beds. Often divers report finding two to three foot tall milfoil plants in areas that they had extensively searched only three weeks earlier. The herbicide is available in a granular and liquid form and application must be made by a state-licensed applicator. The granular formulation of 2,4-D is typically applied using a bow-mounted centrifugal or blower-type spreader and uniformly spread over the water above the milfoil beds and slightly beyond. The clay particles sink to the bottom or are caught up in the plants. The herbicide slowly releases from the clay over the next day. Granular formulations are generally recommended for spot treatment since liquid applications may have more tendency to drift away from the milfoil beds. When the liquid formulation is used, it is applied using subsurface trailing hoses. In both cases, if the project is funded by an Ecology grant or if there are irrigation or drinking water concerns, monitoring will be required. A 2,4-D analysis test kit should be available soon or environmental laboratories can also perform 2,4-D analysis. Rapid turn around of results costs more. General impacts of 2,4-D treatment: 2,4-D is a selective herbicide and milfoil is particularly susceptible at a labeled rate of about 100 pounds per acre (granular product). At this rate impacts to other aquatic plant species are minimal. Even if applied at higher rates there are only a few other aquatic plant species that are affected by 2,4-D. A study conducted in Loon Lake Washington showed that Eurasian watermilfoil was the only aquatic plant whose growth was statistically reduced by the 2,4-D application (Parsons, et. al, 2001). In the Loon Lake study up to 98 percent of the Eurasian watermilfoil biomass in the treatment plots was removed after the July treatment. Click here to see Ecology's risk assessment for the environmental and human health impacts of 2,4-D. A few days after the 2,4-D treatment, observers will see the growing tips of milfoil plants twist and look abnormal. These plants will sink to the sediments usually within one to two weeks of treatment. Unless treatment takes place in dense beds of milfoil, it is unlikely for low oxygen conditions to develop. Results of spot treatment may be variable depending on water movement, size of treatment plot, density of milfoil, weather conditions, underwater springs, etc. Follow-up: Follow-up is essential to ensure the success of eradication. Used alone, 2,4-D is not an eradication tool. Some plants survive the treatment and regrow, so these plants must be removed by other means. Surveys done in Minnesota indicated that, 2,4-D use did not result in eradication of milfoil over the long-term (Crowell, 1999). Treated lakes for which there was no follow up survey work or treatment eventually ended up with milfoil throughout the littoral zone. There is some anecdotal evidence that milfoil plants may become resistant to 2,4-D. Applicators have reported that milfoil in Loon Lake did not respond as well to treatment in 2002 as it had in previous years. If this occurs and the plant population is too large to be hand removed, consider using endothall, diquat, or (when approved by Ecology) triclopyr. There is also some anecdotal evidence that milfoil may germinate from seeds in areas where water levels dropped and then returned. This may happen in low rainfall or low runoff years. It is important to check those areas when the water returns to remove any milfoil that may have germinated. Follow-up is the key! Once milfoil is discovered in a lake, it generally requires continual maintenance to keep it at low levels. Even if milfoil appears to have been eradicated it often is reintroduced by boaters or may germinate from seeds. As long as the lake group continues surveying on a yearly basis, new introductions can be identified quickly and targeted for removal before milfoil can re-establish in the lake. In treated lakes where the lake group has continued diver and surface inspections, milfoil remains at extremely low levels, without impacts to habitat or recreational activities. References: Crowell, W.J. 1999. Minnesota DNR tests the use of 2,4-D in managing Eurasian watermilfoil. Aquatic Nuisance Species Digest. 3(4):42-46. Parsons, Jenifer K.; K.S. Hamel, J.D. Madsen and K.D. Getsinger. 2001. The Use of 2,4-D for Selective Control of An Early Infestation of Eurasian Watermilfoil in Loon Lake, Washington. J. Aquat. Plant Manage. 39:117-125. |
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